An Audience with Neil Armstrong — The subject of this pick is timely, fascinating, rare and well worth the time it takes to watch (I wish it were longer) the four-part interview with Neil Armstrong. He was, of course, famously the first astronaut to step on the lunar surface, and the first of only twelve astronauts to have ever walked on the Moon. Since the Apollo program ended in 1972, no other human has been to the Moon. Our manned space priorities have changed. We had won the race to the Moon and that was that for that. With the final Shuttle mission having been flown less than a year ago, we don’t even have a manned space program right now.

This pick is also unusual in a few ways, not the least of which is that this rare interview with Neil Armstrong was produced and appears online on CPA Australia. Yes indeed. That’s CPA as in Certified Practicing Accountant, which is the Australian version of what we here call Certified Public Accountant. They are one of the sponsors of a series called evoTV’s The Bottom Line, that usually features business-oriented interviews.

evoTV’s The Bottom Line — An intimate look into what shapes, defines and drives our most influential leaders and thinkers. Celebrate their successes, learn from their experience as host The Naked CEO, Alex Malley asks the questions you want answered. evoTV’s The Bottom Line — leadership lessons for the next generation; because experience is the best teacher.

I’m not knocking it. They got the interview after all. And An Audience with Neil Armstrong covers a lot of territory with regard to the Apollo missions, and at that, it’s covered by our most celebrated and private astronaut. Way cool!

Neil Armstrong is a household name, yet, in contrast to his crew-mate Buzz Aldrin, he has studiously stayed out of the spotlight in the decades since he walked on the Moon. He frequently passes on interview and advertising requests, all the while beating back unwelcome advances on his legacy. (Hallmark used his voice recording without permission on a Christmas ornament in 1994, and in a creepier episode, his longtime barber secretly sold a lock of Armstrong’s hair for $3,000 in 2005.)

So it was a coup of sorts for the Certified Practicing Accountants organization of Australia to score an extended interview with Armstrong, a connection that seems about as natural as a two-headed kangaroo. (CEO Alex Malley had developed the relationship, sharing his concerns about long-term strategic planning both in business and politics with Armstrong. The interview was a part of CPA Australia’s 125th anniversary celebration.)

So that’s how CPA Australia scored! And I can’t really say if a more science-oriented interviewer than Alex Malley would have done a better job. He manages to ask the right questions, most of the time.

Another way this pick is unusual, is I rarely link to a site for a single purpose. That’s to say, here’s a video, and that’s all there is. In this case I feel it’s enough, and I have done it once or twice before. And last but not least, I scavenged the link from a thread on our forum, posted this week by SFN member Randy. I checked the link he posted and loved what I saw. So a hat-tip goes out to Randy! I might not have seen this interview if not for him.

Anyhow, enough! If you love science, space, the moon missions, and even the politics behind the reason we went to the moon, plus and a chance to get all that from an astronaut who doesn’t really do interviews, go watch An Audience with Neil Armstrong.

SkeptiQuote:

An assertion that outstrips the evidence is not only a blunder, but a crime.

— Thomas Huxley

Chat Highlights:

Wednesday: Chat started out discussing Asian food and spices. Then we shifted into talking about TAM. Alienist reported from the Women in Secularism conference, and Dr. Mabuse reported about an undercover investigative piece Swedish TV made about misogynistic views of Islamic imams in the 10 largest mosques in Sweden. Chat ended early with some economy and politics.

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